Moody’s affirms ratings of 9 Indian Banks, changes outlook to stable, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Global rating firm Moody’s has affirmed the long-term local and foreign current deposit
ratings of Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI and State Bank of India at Baa3, following sovereign rating action. At the same time, their rating outlooks have been changed to stable from negative.

This rating action is driven by Moody’s recent affirmation of the Indian government’s Baa3 issuer rating and change in outlook to stable from negative.

Moody’s also affirmed the long-term local and foreign currency deposit ratings of Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Punjab National Bank and Union Bank of India. The rating outlooks of these banks has also been changed to stable from negative.

“The affirmation of Axis, ICICI, HDFC Bank and SBI’s deposit ratings and change in outlook to stable follows the change in outlook on the sovereign rating to stable,” Moody’s said in a statement. “The mail previous negative outlook on the sovereign rating drove the negative
outlook on these banks, because of strong linkages to the sovereign credit profile.”

The rating agency highlighted that the affirmation of state-run banks, reflect the fact that despite the significant economic challenges since the onset of the pandemic, their asset quality has only deteriorated modestly while capital has improved.

“Corporate asset quality has improved as legacy issues have been resolved while deterioration in retail asset quality was relatively moderate,” the agency said. Asset quality will further improve if economic activity continues to normalise.”



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

HDFC Bank eyes strategic investor in NBFC arm, sees $9-bn valuation, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Months after shelving plans to list its non-banking subsidiary, HDB Financial Services, HDFC Bank has initiated a formal process to rope in a strategic investor, said people aware of the matter.

The country’s largest private lender has appointed Morgan Stanley to handle this and feelers have gone out to global banks and domestic financial institutions already. The lender is expecting a valuation of Rs 60,000-67,500 crore ($8-9 billion) although the final contours will emerge only once firm offers are placed on the table, said one of the executives cited above.

Though the initial discussions are believed to be for a 20-25% stake, some potential suitors are keen on a path to control or joint control.

The discussions are preliminary in nature, but with the management confident of asset quality improving in a post-pandemic economy, this is the right time to kickstart a monetisation exercise, said experts. Some HDFC Group watchers also see this as a precursor to an eventual listing.

Loan Book, Footprint
“While it’s still unsure what will be the quantum of stake that HDFC Bank will part with, as the parent of HDB Finance, it wants to ensure it discovers the correct value for its NBFC (nonbanking finance company) in line with other non-bank lending peers,” said a person in the know.

As a policy, the bank doesn’t comment on market speculation, said the HDFC Bank spokesperson. HDB Financial Services didn’t respond to queries.

In June 2019, then HDFC Bank managing director and CEO Aditya Puri had hinted at a possible listing. That saw the stock almost double in the grey market to around Rs 1,150 apiece for an estimated Rs 80,000 crore valuation. It has come off those highs amid growing concerns over asset quality, exacerbated during the pandemic, and is currently hovering at Rs 875 per share for a Rs 70,000 crore valuation, down from Rs 970 levels in March. Secondary market experts feel that in anticipation of a stake sale, the buying activity on the stock has risen significantly.

In a recent analyst call after the June quarter results, HDFC Bank CFO Srinivasan Vaidyanathan had said several international and domestic investors had shown interest in the growth plans of the unit and added that the bank may test the market in terms of price discovery. At its recent annual general meeting in August, managing director Sashidhar Jagdishan had said that an outside investor could be brought for price discovery.

HDB Financial’s loan book of Rs 57,390 crore as of June 30 was at about 5% of HDFC Bank’s total advances of Rs 11.47 lakh crore. The lender owns 95.3% of HDB Financial with employee trusts and a few current and former bank officials owning the rest. ET had reported in December 2019 that Puri’s family investment vehicles had netted Rs 200 crore after partially liquidating his investments. In the shadow bank cohort, its cost of funds is among the lowest. The franchise has a nationwide footprint with 1,319 branches in 959 cities. HDB has three primary business lines – enterprise lending to small and medium businesses; asset financing of commercial vehicles and electronics; and short tenor consumer loans.

Most banks have had step-down NBFC subsidiaries to service a wider pool of customers with offerings that may otherwise be difficult to fit the risk profile of a bank. But with the Reserve Bank of India continuing to push banks toward capital preservation, most bank-backed NBFCs such as PNB Housing Finance have had to seek external investors for liquidity and growth support. In January, the RBI had proposed a scale-based regulatory framework for shadow banks to segregate larger entities and expose them to a stricter set of “bank-like” rules. This is aimed at protecting financial stability while ensuring that smaller NBFCs continue to enjoy light-touch regulations and grow with ease.

“This is a pedigreed franchise with a strong parentage and a robust presence in the retail finance segment. Post the Fullerton buyout, several global franchises are keen to explore investment opportunities,” said the head of a large financial institution aware of the process, on condition of anonymity. “The final guidelines of NBFC investments is also expected shortly which will further clear the regulatory air.”

Covid blues
The second Covid-19 wave had worsened asset-quality metrics, with HDB Financial Services reporting threefold increase in gross bad loans in a year. HDB had posted a gross non-performing asset (GNPA) ratio of 7.75% as on June 30, against 2.86% in the same period a year earlier. Bad loans doubled in just one quarter, a sequential comparison of numbers showed. The GNPA ratio was at 3.89% on March 31. Over the past 10-year period, the average GNPA ratio has been 1.55% and return on equity has been 13.4%.

Net profit dropped 44% to Rs 130.6 crore at the end of the June quarter, from Rs 232.7 crore a year ago. However, analysts see 19.8% capital adequacy in FY21, despite lower net profit and higher provisioning, as a positive.

Apart from the recognised bad debt, HDB Financial had restructured loans worth Rs 5,321 crore at FY21-end, according to the company’s annual report.

“Valuations may have come off the peak but are still high at a time when that of listed non-bank lenders are near their yearly lows, reflecting the premium the HDFC Group commands in an industry otherwise struggling to generate sufficient liquidity,” another investment banker told ET. “Investors are optimistic about the NBFC’s growth as it has access to cheap sources of funds through its parent and generates high margins.”

In FY21, HDB Financial sold loans worth Rs 473 crore under securitisation, with its parent buying to the tune of Rs 379 crore, according to the latest annual report. The NBFC is required to report any related-party transactions with its parent. At its last AGM held on June 25, the company got shareholder approval to conduct securitisation transactions worth Rs 7,500 crore with HDFC Bank in the current year.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

IDBI bank unveils attractive offers this festive season, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


IDBI, on account of its foundation week, is now introducing its retail asset products this festive season.

The products would include Auto loans, Education loans, home loans with augmented features.

To fall in line with the auspicious period of time, IDBI has revealed its ‘i_zoomdrive’ loans that will allow quick processing, luring interest rates, zero penalties on part/ pre-closure and 100% financing for certain segments for its customers.

The bank has attempted to strengthen young Indians’ education by launching ‘i_learn’.

This product allows the customer to avail a plethora of education courses including specialised courses, overseas courses with higher loan amount, high tenure or flexible repayment options.

Home loans, IDBI announced, would now have additional features like nil processing fees, flexible repayment options and quick processing to aid one’s dreams of owing a house.

With these offerings, IDBI believes that its products would resonate with the festive and auspicious vibe in each household.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Bharatpe enters ‘Buy Now Pay Later’ segment

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


BharatPe on Wednesday announced its entry into the Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) category with the launch of ‘postpe’.

“Customers can download the postpe app from Play Store and avail interest-free credit limit of up to ₹10 lakh,” it said in a statement, adding that postpe is not limited to big-ticket purchases, but can also be used for micro-purchases. BharatPe aims to facilitate a loan book of $300 million on postpe in the first 12 months, for its lending partners.

Also read: Leading companies come together to set up Merchants Payments Alliance of India

Ashneer Grover, Co-Founder and Managing Director, BharatPe said, “postpe is a product built on three simple principles: Consumer should be able to pay using credit everywhere – QRs, Card Machine or Online; consumer should be able to convert into EMI at ease – not inconvenienced at point of sale and merchant should not be charged for accepting payments through BNPL.”

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SBI extends partnership with TCS for another 5 years

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) on Wednesday announced that its long-standing client State Bank of India (SBI) has extended its partnership for another five years.

SBI has been using TCS BaNCS for over two decades now. As a part of the new contract, TCS will continue to maintain and enhance SBI’s application estate around core banking, trade finance, financial reporting, and financial inclusion with new features and functionality. This will support the bank’s ability to launch newer offerings and respond to business and regulatory changes.

Digital solutions for Gen Next banking

In addition, TCS will continue to leverage its contextual knowledge of SBI’s business and technology landscape to help the bank with large transformation programmes to help its customers make their day-to-day banking easy and secure. In the most recent such engagement, TCS is helping build Bharat Craft — an omnichannel, online B2B e-commerce platform which would serve as a marketplace for MSMEs, jointly driven by SBI and the Government of India.

As fintechs turn up the heat, banks must up their tech game

Prior to that, TCS collaborated with SBI to execute the simultaneous merger of five associate banks and Bharatiya Mahila Bank. The colossal undertaking involved integrating over 200 business processes, over 43 IT applications, 17,500 products, and over 50 billion database records, impacting over 50,000 tellers across 7,000 branches. Immaculate planning and execution ensured accomplishment of all goals, without any interruption to services, in just six weeks, TCS said.

‘Valuable partner’

Ravindra Pandey, DMD & CIO, SBI, said, “Technology and innovation have been at the core of SBI’s growth and transformation journey over the last two decades. TCS has been a valuable partner since the beginning and has supported us in building and running a high-performing, resilient and scalable core banking platform that is foundational to all our digital initiatives. We are pleased to extend our relationship with TCS as we continue to work together to launch new initiatives for enhanced customer experience.”

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

The case for being boring with your money, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The idea of gaining wealth in flashy ways isn’t new. After all, Charles Ponzi, for whom Ponzi schemes were named, defrauded investors more than 100 years ago with a get-rich-quick scheme built on a foundation of lies. Today, speculative investments, multilevel marketing companies and other risky efforts to turn a profit still lay seductive traps.

You can always leave your money alone in an interest-bearing account and let time do its thing, but that doesn’t exactly make for exciting party conversations, does it? So we open and close accounts. We invest in hot stocks and sell them at the first sign of bad news. We mess with our money because, in our minds, growing wealth is supposed to take effort.

“In almost everything else we do, there’s a payoff to activity: If I want to be a good runner, I should run every day. If I want to be a good painter, I should constantly practice,” Morgan Housel, partner at The Collaborative Fund and author of “The Psychology of Money,” said in an email. “But if you want to be a good investor, the best thing by far for people to do is not trade, not tinker, just leave it alone – and I think that’s just so counterintuitive because it’s so unique to investing.”

In a world full of financial influencers peddling products and friends bragging about buying NFTs, it’s perfectly fine to manage your money in a mostly yawn-inducing way. Here’s why.

BEING BORING GIVES YOU MORE TIME TO LIVE YOUR LIFE

Dealing with your money is a necessary chore, and it’s not exactly fun. Thankfully, we live in efficient times. In a few minutes, you can set up automatic money transfers that quietly send your cash into separate accounts serving different purposes. Why keep money management on your to-do list when it can happen on its own quite literally while you sleep?

“Money is a means by which you live your life, not life itself,” Meg Bartelt, financial planner and founder of Flow Financial Planning, said in an email. “The more complicated, changeable or scary your investments are, the more time you spend working on them or thinking about them, and therefore the less time you have to live life.”

BEING BORING KEEPS YOU FROM MAKING RASH DECISIONS

It’s important to take a peek at your investment accounts periodically, but obsessing over every market move is exhausting and counterproductive. It can lead to making reactive decisions that hurt your wealth in the long run.

Choosing to be boring with your money is an exercise in letting go of the illusion of total control. Yes, there will always be round-the-clock financial news, but not everything happening in the larger economy affects you as an individual. Turn off news and stock market alerts on your phone so you no longer feel that itch to react. Instead, mindfully decide when to watch the news and check on your accounts so you can stay informed with less stress.

WHAT BORING MONEY MANAGEMENT LOOKS LIKE

– CREATE A PLAN YOU (MOSTLY) STICK TO: Bartelt finds that, whether her clients avoid their money or obsessively track it, it’s because they all feel the same emotion: fear. The antidote is a financial plan based on specific goals and values. “Having a plan is reassuring,” she said. “Once they have the plan, or hell, once they know they’re going to have one, people relax.” Base your savings and investing goals on what you intend to spend money on in the short-, medium- and long-term. Leave wiggle room for life changes and other uncertainties, because those are guaranteed to happen.

– PREPARE FOR EMERGENCIES: There’s nothing particularly sexy about emergency funds, life insurance and up-to-date wills, but should the unexpected happen, these things can help you stay financially steady.

– AUTOMATE YOUR MONEY: Transfer funds automatically from checking to savings or from checking to a brokerage account. Contributing to a 401(k) through your job is automation, too, since that money comes out of your paycheck directly. Making regular contributions to different accounts, and increasing them as your budget allows and goals shift, will grow your nest egg.

Once you have your boring financial foundation in place, you can sprinkle on some riskier investments if you want. But remain faithful to your plan. “You have to actively and continuously ignore the ubiquitous distractions, charlatans, and blowhards in order to stay true to your own values and goals,” Bartelt said.

______________________________________

This column was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance site NerdWallet. The content is for educational and informational purposes and does not constitute investment advice. Sara Rathner is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: srathner@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @SaraKRathner.

RELATED LINKS:

NerdWallet: What Is a Financial Plan, and How Can I Make One? https://bit.ly/nerdwallet-financial-plan



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

ICICI Bank launches contactless payment service via iMobile Pay app, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


ICICI Bank, in partnership with Visa and Comviva, has launched a contactless payment service through its banking app, iMobile Pay.

The service enables customers to tap their smartphones to pay at POS (Point of Sale) machines of merchant outlets without carrying their cards for payments at retail stores.

Based on the Near Field Communications (NFC) technology, the payment service enables customers to create digital versions of their physical ICICI Bank debit and credit cards on the iMobile Pay app. Using the digital cards, customers can initiate electronic payments at merchant outlets from NFC enabled Android smartphones by waving their phone near a contactless POS device.

Customer’s card details are not shared during the transaction process and are stored virtually in the Bank’s secure cloud server.

The facility of ‘Tap to Pay’ through iMobile Pay is currently available on Visa cards and will be activated on Mastercard cards too.

Customers can follow below given steps to avail the service:

1. One time activation:

> The customer has to login to iMobile Pay app and click on ‘Tap to Pay’ icon on the login page or ‘Shop’ section.

> Then the customer needs to select registered debit and credit cards to make a digital version and then click on ‘I Agree’ to accept the terms & conditions.

> The customers can create virtual cards against each of their ICICI Bank Visa credit and debit cards

2. Making a payment:

> Log in to iMobile Pay app and click on ‘Tap to Pay’ on login page or ‘Shop’ section

> Select a virtual Visa card to make the payment and wave or tap the phone near the NFC enabled POS device

> A message of ‘Payment initiated successfully’ appears on the phone confirming the transaction



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Bank, NBFCs report spurt in Q2 advances as lending recovery picks up, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Most banks and non-banking finance companies reported a jump in disbursal of advances in the quarter ended September in a sign that credit uptake is rising.

HDFC Bank saw its advances book grow by around 15.4% year on year at the end of the September quarter, proforma numbers released by the private sector lender showed. Its total loans aggregated to Rs 11.98 lakh crore at the end of September, up 4.4% sequentially. Its total loans were at Rs 10.38 lakh crore at the end of September 2020.

As per the bank’s internal business classification, retail loans during the September quarter grew by around 13% year on year and 5.5% over June quarter. Commercial and rural banking loans grew by around 27.5% y-o-y while other wholesale loans grew by around 6%.

Mortgage lender HDFC assigned loans amounting to Rs 7,132 crore at the end of the September quarter versus Rs 3,026 crore a year earlier. It sold loans

worth Rs 27,199 crore in the preceding 12 months versus Rs 14,138 crore in the previous year, regulatory filings show.

Private sector lender

IndusInd Bank

IndusInd Bank reported better-than-expected credit growth of 10% with total loans at Rs 2.2 lakh crore at the end of the September quarter, preliminary numbers filed with stock exchanges showed.

IDFC First Bank posted 9.75% growth in advances at Rs 1,17,243 crore for the second quarter ended September.

Private lender Yes Bank posted a 3.6% rise in its advances to Rs 1.72 lakh crore, though retail disbursements grew at a faster rate and grew by 126.6% over last

year to Rs 8531 crore at the end of the September quarter as against Rs 3764 crore a year ago.

NBFCs

Leading non-bank lender Bajaj Finance reported it had booked 6.3 million new loans at the end of the September quarter versus 3.6 million a year ago. It’s

assets under management (AUM) stood at Rs 1.66 lakh crore for the quarter under review as against Rs 1.37 lakh crore a year earlier.

Non-bank lender Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services posted a 60% year-on-year growth in disbursements at Rs 6,450 crore at the end of the September

quarter. With further improvement in mobility during September, the collection efficiency for the NBFC was reported at 100% for September 2021.

Subject to improvement in auto supply chain, the company is hopeful of a good Q3 FY22 ahead, supported by festival season and harvest cash flow.” M&M Finance said.

AU Small Finance Bank

AU Small Finance Bank Ltd’s total deposits were up 45% on year at Rs 39,030 crore as of September 30, according to provisional data from the bank. Gross advances rose 32% on year to Rs 36,405 crore. Of the total gross advances, the small finance bank restructured 800 accounts worth Rs 800 crore in July-September. Disbursements rose 57% on year and 171% on quarter to Rs 5135 crore. It also made disbursements worth 530 mln rupees under the Reserve Bank of India’s targeted long-term repo operations.

RBL Bank’s total deposits rose 17% on year as of Sep 30, according to provisional data from the bank. Deposits stood at 755.9 bln rupees, up 1% on quarter. The bank’s gross advances rose 1% on year to Rs 58,046 crore as on September 30. Of the gross advances, 55% comprised retail advances while the remaining 45% is in the wholesale category.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Banks, NBFCs report jump in advances in September quarter, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


In a sign that bank credit growth may be on an uptrend, most bank and non-bank lenders reported a jump in disbursal of advances in the quarter ended September.

HDFC Bank saw its advances book grow by around 15.4% year on year at the end of the September quarter, proforma numbers released by the private sector lender showed. Its total loans aggregated to Rs 11.98 lakh crore at the end of September, up 4.4% sequentially. It’s total loans were at Rs 10.38 lakh crore at the end of September 2020.

As per the bank’s internal business classification, retail loans during the September quarter grew by around 13% year on year and 5.5% over June quarter. Commercial and rural banking loans grew by around 27.5% y-o-y while other wholesale loans grew by around 6%.

HDFC Bank has “resumed its retail growth journey” as the economy recovered from the second wave of Covid-19, said Gautam Chhuggani, director – financial at investment management firm Bernstein Research.

“We expect loan mix normalisation to be the norm in the coming quarters, with a focus on improving margins and ongoing tech transformation,” he said and noted that the bank has already reported a healthy bounce-back on new credit card issuances after the Reserve Bank of India in August lifted a ban imposed in December last year.

Mortgage lender HDFC assigned loans amounting to Rs 7,132 crore at the end of the September quarter versus Rs 3,026 crore a year earlier. It sold loans worth Rs 27,199 crore in the preceding 12 months versus Rs 14,138 crore in the previous year, regulatory filings show.

Private sector lender IndusInd Bank reported better-than-expected credit growth of 10% with total loans at Rs 2.2 lakh crore at the end of the September quarter, preliminary numbers filed with stock exchanges showed.

“The credit growth indicates underlying strong credit re-acceleration in the retail book,” said Anand Dama, senior research analyst at Emkay Financial Services. “The bank has been growing its corporate book since the June quarter and we believe that the bank is likely to have seen healthy momentum in the corporate book in September quarter as well.”

IDFC First Bank posted 9.75% growth in advances at Rs 1,17,243 crore for the second quarter ended September.

Leading non-bank lender Bajaj Finance reported it had booked 6.3 million new loans at the end of the September quarter versus 3.6 million a year ago. It’s assets under management (AUM) stood at Rs 1.66 lakh crore for the quarter under review as against Rs 1.37 lakh crore a year earlier.

Non-bank lender Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services posted a 60% year-on-year growth in disbursements at Rs 6,450 crore at the end of the September quarter. With further improvement in mobility during September, the collection efficiency for the NBFC was reported at 100% for September 2021.

“Subject to improvement in auto supply chain, the company is hopeful of a good Q3 FY22 ahead, supported by festival season and harvest cash flow.” M&M Finance said in a statement.

Private lender Yes Bank posted a 3.6% rise in its advances to Rs 1.72 lakh crore, though retail disbursements grew at a faster rate and grew by 126.6% over last year to Rs 8531 crore at the end of the September quarter as against Rs 3764 crore a year ago.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Leading companies come together to set up Merchants Payments Alliance of India

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Leading companies using digital payments to service consumers including Facebook, Microsoft and Netflix have come together to set up the Merchants Payments Alliance of India (MPAI), which would promote digitalisation and financial literacy in the country.

“The alliance’s founding members include BookMyShow, Disney+ Hotstar, Facebook, Future Generali, Microsoft, Netflix, Spotify, Times Internet, and Zoom,” said a statement on Tuesday.

The formation of the alliance comes soon after the Reserve Bank of India’s directive on e-mandate that came into effect from October 1.

“MPAI will work towards such causes by addressing and constructively engaging with the payments regulator and industry. The alliance will enhance the value of India’s digital markets, provide public interest research and thought leadership on digital payments, and build consumer awareness,” it said, adding that the group will also become the principal resource platform for merchants and the payments ecosystem to contribute to policy conversations.

Also read: Explained: RBI’s new auto debit rules

Vivan Sharan, MPAI Secretariat, said, “The MPAI sees itself as a collective, using the operational experience of merchants, to engage on policy matters such as the e-mandate issue, which will help reduce transaction-related frictions and improve the efficiency of digital markets.”

Vishal Mehta, Strategic Partnerships and Payments, Microsoft, a member of MPAI, said, “The group’s purpose is to be a collaborator to the digital payments policy discourse and Microsoft is excited to be part of this initiative.”

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 104 105 106 107 108 540